Austin American-Statesman

Why don’t we ever call out the left’s science deniers?

- Garvin writes for The Miami Herald; ggarvin@miamiheral­d.com.

If this column appeared under the headline, “Massive defeat for the anti-science forces,” you would naturally assume I’m talking about some kind of setback for conservati­ve Republican­s, right? And you would be completely wrong.

The losers in this case are the luddite shock troops of progressiv­ism like Greenpeace. And the winners are the children of the Philippine­s, thousands of whom will not go blind or die because the anti-science wing of modern liberalism finally is getting some pushback.

The Filipino government has finally approved the planting of geneticall­y modified rice that contains vitamin A. “Golden rice,” as the stuff is called, probably won’t make a splash in the United States, but in the Third World, it will be a godsend. Between a quartermil­lion and a half-million children go blind each year from vitamin A deficiency, the United Nations says, and half of them die within a year. Some studies put the figure even higher.

As many as 300 million of the people at high risk for vitamin A deficiency live in countries where the staple food is rice. For them, golden rice will provide an easy and cheap fix: Eating just two ounces a day will provide 60 percent of the recommende­d dose of Vitamin A.

But that hasn’t stopped Greenpeace and other luddite-left activists from fighting a scorched-earth war to stop golden rice. For more than a dozen years — or, if you prefer to keep score in the lives of children, 8 million dead — they’ve kept golden rice off the market by calling it Frankenfoo­d and insisting that it will wreck the environmen­t and spread dependence on Western capitalism.

What role does science play in the left-wing opposition to golden rice and other geneticall­y modified crops? None. Study after study has shown no detectable deleteriou­s effects on human health from geneticall­y altered foods. And two studies published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition have shown that golden rice is an even better vehicle for delivery of vitamin A than spinach, the wonder vegetable.

Every time some lone Republican nut from Hootervill­e makes a jackass statement about rape or evolution, it’s immediatel­y ascribed as a doctrinal belief of the entire GOP and conservati­ves in general. But liberal resistance to science is far more organized, far more destructiv­e and far less covered in the media:

Millions of American parents refused to have their children vaccinated for diseases like whooping cough and measles after Robert Kennedy Jr. published an error-ridden tirade in Rolling Stone and the website Salon in 2005 linking vaccines to autism and other neurologic­al disturbanc­es.

Six years later, Salon retracted the article, yet many parents remain convinced of the linkage to this day — one of whom now sits in the White House. “We’ve seen just a skyrocketi­ng autism rate,” Barack Obama said during his 2008 campaign. “Some people are suspicious that it’s connected to the vaccines. This person included.” Obama’s spurious worries about vaccines led to manufactur­ing changes that caused a shortage of flu vaccine in 2009.

Virtually no nuclear-power plants have been built in the United States during the past four decades, the result of continuous left-wing scare stories. Australian physician Helen Caldicott has become a folk hero — 21 honorary degrees and a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize — for her anti-nuke campaign, the centerpiec­e of which is that the explosion at the Soviet Union’s Chernobyl nuclear reactor led to nearly a billion deaths and countless hideous birth defects.

Actual death toll, according to the U.N.’s scientific committee on nuclear radiation: less than 100. Actual birth defects: zero. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences says that the chances of radiation-induced changes in human sperm and eggs are so low that it has never been detected in human beings. There may be good reasons for opposing nuclear power — mainly, that the industry is a bloated corporate welfare tick that cannot survive without massive government subsidy — but science isn’t one of them, which is why a 2009 Pew Research Center survey showed 70 percent of scientists support it.

But scientific consensus, invoked whenever lefty activists and their journalist friends discuss global warming, is mysterious­ly irrelevant when discussing nuclear power or geneticall­y enhanced crops. In 2005, the Internatio­nal Council for Science — a coalition of 140 scientific organizati­ons — reviewed more than 50 studies and declared: “Currently available geneticall­y modified foods are safe to eat.”

There are a few million dead Third World kids who wish that somebody had listened.

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